A Book About Doctors
Spelling and punctuation are sometimes erratic. A few obvious misprints have been corrected, but in general the original spelling and typesetting conventions have been retained. Accents are inconsistent, and have not been standardised.
PROF. BILLROTH'S SURGICAL CLYNIC A. F. SELLIGMANN, PINX. COPYRIGHT 1892 WM. WOOD & CO. NEW YORK
Author of The Real Lord Byron, The Real Shelley, A Book About Lawyers, etc., etc. 1904 THE SAALFIELD PUBLISHING CO. NEW YORK AKRON, O. CHICAGO
Copyright, 1904, by THE SAALFIELD PUBLISHING COMPANY The WERNER COMPANY Akron, O.
The writer of this volume has endeavoured to collect, in a readable and attractive form, the best of those medical Ana that have been preserved by tradition or literature. In doing so, he has not only done his best to combine and classify old stories, but also cautiously to select his materials, so that his work, while affording amusement to the leisure hours of Doctors learned in their craft, might contain no line that should render it unfit for the drawing-room table. To effect this, it has been found necessary to reject many valuable and characteristic anecdotes—some of them entering too minutely into the mysteries and technicalities of medicine and surgery, and some being spiced with a humour ill calculated to please the delicacy of the nineteenth century.
Much of the contents of this volume has never before been published, but, after being drawn from a variety of manuscript sources, is now for the first time submitted to the world. It would be difficult to enumerate all the persons to whom the writer is indebted for access to documents, suggestions, critical notes, or memoranda. He cannot, however, let the present occasion go by without expressing his gratitude to the College of Physicians, for the prompt urbanity with which they allowed him to inspect the treasures of their library. To Dr. Munk, the learned librarian of the College—who for many years, in the scant leisure allowed him by the urgent demands of an extensive practice, has found a dignified pastime in antiquarian and biographic research—the writer's best thanks are due. With a liberality by no means always found in a student possessed of special information, the Doctor surrendered his precious stores to the use of a comparative stranger, apparently without even thinking of the value of his gift. But even more than to the librarian of the College of Physicians the writer is indebted for assistance to his very kind friend Dr. Diamond, of Twickenham House—a gentleman who, to all the best qualities of a complete physician, unites the graces of a scholarly mind, an enthusiasm for art, and the fascinations of a generous nature.
John Cordy Jeaffreson
Transcriber's note:
John Cordy Jeaffreson
CONTENTS.
ILLUSTRATIONS.
PREFACE.
A BOOK ABOUT DOCTORS
CHAPTER I.
SOMETHING ABOUT STICKS, AND RATHER LESS ABOUT WIGS.
CHAPTER II.
EARLY ENGLISH PHYSICIANS.
CHAPTER III.
SIR THOMAS BROWNE AND SIR KENELM DIGBY.
CHAPTER IV.
SIR HANS SLOANE.
CHAPTER V.
THE APOTHECARIES AND SIR SAMUEL GARTH.
CHAPTER VI.
QUACKS.
CHAPTER VII.
JOHN RADCLIFFE.
CHAPTER VIII.
THE DOCTOR AS A BON-VIVANT.
CHAPTER IX.
FEES.
CHAPTER X.
PEDAGOGUES TURNED DOCTORS.
CHAPTER XI.
THE GENEROSITY AND THE PARSIMONY OF PHYSICIANS.
CHAPTER XII.
BLEEDING.
CHAPTER XIII.
RICHARD MEAD.
CHAPTER XIV.
IMAGINATION AS A REMEDIAL POWER.
CHAPTER XV.
IMAGINATION AND NERVOUS EXCITEMENT. MESMER.
CHAPTER XVI.
MAKE WAY FOR THE LADIES!
CHAPTER XVII.
MESSENGER MONSEY.
CHAPTER XVIII.
AKENSIDE.
CHAPTER XIX.
LETTSOM.
CHAPTER XX.
A FEW MORE QUACKS.
CHAPTER XXI.
ST. JOHN LONG.
CHAPTER XXII.
THE QUARRELS OF PHYSICIANS.
CHAPTER XXIII.
THE LOVES OF PHYSICIANS.
CHAPTER XXIV.
LITERATURE AND ART.
CHAPTER XXV.
NUMBER ELEVEN—A HOSPITAL STORY.
CHAPTER XXVI.
MEDICAL BUILDINGS.
CHAPTER XXVII.
THE COUNTRY MEDICAL MAN.
INDEX.
FOOTNOTES:
Transcriber's note: